State v. McKean

36 Iowa 343
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 23, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 36 Iowa 343 (State v. McKean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McKean, 36 Iowa 343 (iowa 1873).

Opinion

Cole, J.

— Upon the trial of the defendant there were but three witnesses introduced. The first, Meeks, testified that he was told by a third person, whose name he gives, that such person and the defendant wanted him to go into horse-stealing business with them ; that he agreed to do so, and then told certain other persons of it; these persons said for him to go ahead and they would pay him well if he would go on and detect the men ; he said he was a detective and would do it. This witness then states the circumstances of the larceny, the defendant being present, and where the horses were sold by him, the defendant not being present or receiving any of the proceeds, except for the saddles, which were his; a part of the proceeds were paid over to others of the company. The next witness testifies that he was one of the committee that [344]*344employed the witness who had just testified, and agreed to pay him well for it, and that the witness had told them what he would do, and had afterward detailed the facts to the committee just as he had now testified. The last witness was the owner of one of the horses stolen, had missed him and afterward found him in Kansas, just as the witness first testifying had told him.

The court gave to the jury, among other instructions, the following: 8th. If you find from the evidence that the witness, Meeks, went into an arrangement with the defendant and others to steal the horse in question, and did assist in taking said horse, whether or not he is an accomplice in the crime, if any has been committed, will depend whether, at the time he took the horse, he took it with felonious intent, that is, with the intent to appropriate the horse to his own use and to deprive the owner of thense thereof. 9th. If at the time of the taking he was actuated by or possessed of such felonious intent, he is then to be regarded as an accomplice; but on the other hand, if you are satisfied from the evidence, that Meeks intendedf rom the beginning to act the part of a detective to ferret out and make known the crime and secret frauds of the defendant and others, then he is not to be regarded as an accomplice. This question of whether Meeks was an accomplice or a detective is important, and must be by you determined, in view of the next instruction which I shall give you. It is a question of fact which you are to determine from the evidence. 10th. If you find, under the instructions given above, that the witness Meeks was an accomplice, the laws of this State direct that a conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice alone, unless such testimony is corroborated by such other testimony as shall tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense; and the corroboration is not sufficient if it merely shows the commission of the offense or the circumstances thereof. But this rule of evidence does not apply if you find that Meeks was not an accomplice but a detective.”

The precise point of objection to these instructions, as we understand it, is, that the court did not instruct that the wit[345]*345ness, Meeks, was an accomplice, as a matter of law, whether he was acting feloniously or as a detective.

The authorities upon this question are few; indeed there is but one case we have found, in which the point was directly ruled. That case is Rex v. Despard, 28 Howell’s St. Trials, 346 (i. e. 498). The defendant was tried before Lord Ellen-borough, Baron Thomson and Justices La Blanc and Chamber for high treason; the trial occurred, in February, 1803 (43 Geo. III). On the trial, one Thomas Windsor testified that he had received from one of the defendant’s associates some printed cards which were received and sworn to by the adherents by reading the affidavit on it and kissing it; that he had done so, and had delivered one to Mr. Bownas, an army agent, from whom he received advice as to the conduct he should hold with the persons in the conspiracy, and that he followed such advice. His testimony was very important and full. Mr. Bownas testified that he received the card from Windsor and gave him advice and directions how to act. After the testimony -was closed and the arguments of counsel concluded, Lord Ellenborough, in the course of a most elaborate and extended “ summing up,” and just after speaking of accomplices, used the following language: “But there is another class of persons which cannot properly be considered as coming within the description, or as partaking of the criminal contamination of accomplices; I mean persons entering into communication with the conspirators with an original purpose of discovering their secret designs, and disclosing them for the benefit of the public. The existence of such original purpose on their part is best evinced by a conduct which precludes them from ever wavering in or swerving from the discharge of their duty, if they might otherwise be disposed so to do; as in the case of Windsor who bound himself to his duty by an early communication to Bownas, and received from him directions as to the steps which he should afterward pursue, if he entered into and continued in the apparent prosecution of the purposes of the conspiracy; with this view and object he is not an accomplice, although, per[346]*346haps, a great degree of objection or disfavor may attach to him on other grounds, for certainly no person of very delicate feelings (however necessary it may be in some cases) would choose to go on from day to day, apparently forwarding the purposes of a conspiracy, in order that he might afterward disclose it and bring the parties concerned in it to justice; but still, whatever may be the merit or demerit of this species of conduct on other grounds, it is not taking the fact as Windsor has stated it, the case of an accomplice.”

In the text-books on evidence, we find either literal extracts from this charge of Lord Ellenborough, as in vol. 1, Phil. on Ev., § 3, ch. 6, p. 118 (vol. 3, 4th Am. ed., 1859); or a statement of the rule in substantially his language, as in vol. 1, Greenl on Ev., § 383. The case of Rex v. Despard is the case referred to by all text-writers. In the case of Commonwealth v. Downing, 4 Gray, 29, which was a prosecution for the unlawful sale of intoxicating liquor, and where the witness testified to facts constituting the offense, and that he bought the liquor for the express purpose of prosecuting the defendant for the sale, the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury, as matter of law, “ that a witness who would come into court and testify that he had purchased and procured another person to commit a crime, for the purpose of prosecuting the person so hired and procured to offend, was not a credible witness, and the jury ought not to found a conviction upon such testimony.” This was refused and the court instructed that it would be competent for them to convict the defendant upon this testimony if they believed it to be true, and if they further believed that the allegations of the complaint had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt; that it sometimes became necessary, in order to detect offenders, to match cunning with cunning, and accomplish by artifice what could not otherwise be consummated; and mentioned as familiar examples the efforts made to detect horse thieves, counterfeiters, incendiaries, and the like.” The defendant was found guilty, and on appeal, the supreme court held that “ the witness was not an accomplice. This point was settled [347]*347in Commonwealth v. Williard, 22 Pick. 476.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Iowa 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mckean-iowa-1873.